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Courtesy of the Internet Vol 2

Posted: Tue Mar 25, 2008 11:16 pm
by Andrew Young
Ive got a handful more Ill upload shortly.

Escarpe con acicate. Silgo XV. Museo del Ejército. Madrid
[img]http://www.saber.es/img/recursos/regnum/fotos/600/f032.gif[/img]

Bacinete siglo XIV. Museo de Burgos
[img]http://www.saber.es/img/recursos/regnum/fotos/250/f031.gif[/img][img]http://www.saber.es/img/recursos/regnum/fotos/600/f031.gif[/img]


http://araldica.blogspot.com/2006/12/articolo.html
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http://www.carabinieri.it/Internet/Edit ... 062-00.htm
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from here:
http://www.arscives.com/bladesign/RDCollection.htm


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from Gravensteen castle


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Nº Inventario 2793
Colección ARMAS Y ARMADURAS
Autor
Título Armadura completa.
Cronología XVI
Escuela Española
Lugar de producción España
Técnica Grabado
Dimensiones 175 cm.
Localización En reserva

* Ficha técnica tomada de CAMPS CAZORLA, Emilio en Inventario del Museo Lázaro 1948 - 1950
Bibliografía

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Nº Inventario 115
Colección ARMAS Y ARMADURAS
Autor
Título Armadura Maximiliana.
Cronología XVI (mediados)
Dimensiones 180 cm.
Localización En reserva

* Ficha técnica tomada de CAMPS CAZORLA, Emilio en Inventario del Museo Lázaro 1948 - 1950
Exposiciones Bibliografía

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Nº Inventario 117
Colección ARMAS Y ARMADURAS
Autor
Título Armadura.
Cronología XVI (mediados)
Dimensiones 184 cm.
Localización En reserva

* Ficha técnica tomada de CAMPS CAZORLA, Emilio en Inventario del Museo Lázaro 1948 - 1950
Bibliografía

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Nº Inventario 160
Colección ARMAS Y ARMADURAS
Autor
Título Armadura.
Cronología XVI (primera mitad)
Dimensiones 177 cm.
Localización En reserva

* Ficha técnica tomada de CAMPS CAZORLA, Emilio en Inventario del Museo Lázaro 1948 - 1950
Bibliografía

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Nº Inventario 161
Colección ARMAS Y ARMADURAS
Autor
Título Armadura.
Cronología
Dimensiones 179 cm.
Localización En reserva

* Ficha técnica tomada de CAMPS CAZORLA, Emilio en Inventario del Museo Lázaro 1948 - 1950
Bibliografía

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Nº Inventario 111
Colección ARMAS Y ARMADURAS
Autor
Título Celada.
Cronología XVI (primera mitad)
Dimensiones 49,5 cm.
Localización En reserva

* Ficha técnica tomada de CAMPS CAZORLA, Emilio en Inventario del Museo Lázaro 1948 - 1950
Bibliografía
Antiguo Inventario Celada con narizal en punta y visera rasgada, con su bara de malla, y puesta sobre busto con esclavina de mall. Dimensiones: altura total sobe maniquí, 495 mm. (CAMPS CAZORLA, Emilio 1949-1950) .

Reproducciones R.004-07
Digitalización de alta resolución CD ROM (A)

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Nº Inventario 113
Colección ARMAS Y ARMADURAS
Autor
Título Celada.
Cronología XVI
Escuela Milanesa (?) / Italiana (?)
Lugar de producción Milán (?) / Italia (?)
Material Hierro
Dimensiones 49 cm.
Localización En reserva

* Ficha técnica tomada de CAMPS CAZORLA, Emilio en Inventario del Museo Lázaro 1948 - 1950
Bibliografía


Antiguo Inventario Celada de hierro con babera y peto y doble visera con tanillas rasgadas horizontales; cresta y damasquinado fondos rellenos dorados. Dimensiones: altura completa, 49 centímetros. (CAMPS CAZORLA, Emilio 1949-1950) .

Reproducciones R.004-06
Digitalización de alta resolución CD ROM (A)












And I couldnt resist:

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Posted: Tue Mar 25, 2008 11:27 pm
by William of Stonebridge
It would be hard to run with the legs like that. :lol:
Are the pauldrons right? They look odd too me.

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Posted: Tue Mar 25, 2008 11:35 pm
by Broadway
This helm has the same expression as Josh Warren's.

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Posted: Tue Mar 25, 2008 11:48 pm
by Andrew Young
yes it does :)

Posted: Wed Mar 26, 2008 9:15 am
by Donal Mac Ruiseart
Durasteel wrote: And I couldn't resist

Bah-dah, bah-dah-dah!

Bada-bada-bada bah bah-dah-dah!


Or ahould it be, "Resistance is futile!" ? :twisted:

Posted: Wed Mar 26, 2008 11:21 am
by Talbot
wow, there are a lot of "Victorianisms" in that lot! Some authentic stuff too though.

Posted: Wed Mar 26, 2008 12:03 pm
by Mike England
William of stonebridge wrote:It would be hard to run with the legs like that. :lol:
Are the pauldrons right? They look odd too me.

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I recall seeing this image around here somewhere and the pauldrons are on backwards.

Posted: Wed Mar 26, 2008 12:30 pm
by Mac
The first picture is the very quintessence of a Victorian sabaton. I think every collection must have one or two. There must have bean a shop that turned out hundreds of them.

There are so few real gothic sabatons extant, that collectors have little to help them sharpen their eyes. These hideous fakes just get accepted; in part out of ignorance, and in part out of the blinding romantic desperation that drives people to want to have "complete suits".

Beware!

Mac

Posted: Wed Mar 26, 2008 1:04 pm
by James Arlen Gillaspie
Whole lotta Winkelmeyer in that Spanish stuff. The 'Max' with the switched legs has its pauldrons on forwards, but the right one has come apart.

Posted: Wed Mar 26, 2008 1:18 pm
by Andrew Young
I know there some vicky stuff in there....but then again, vicky stuff is probably worlds better thant he average scadian gear too.

As an astute capt once said..its the lesser of two weevils :mrgreen:

Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 1:05 pm
by Mac
Durasteel Corporation wrote:I know there some vicky stuff in there....but then again, vicky stuff is probably worlds better thant he average scadian gear too.

As an astute capt once said..its the lesser of two weevils :mrgreen:



I'm with ya for the most part...But armor still has to pass the "can this work on the human body" test.
Look again at that sabaton. In spite of all it's lames, it will not flex the 70 or 80 degrees required as a minimum for walking.
That said, I do see your point. Sometimes I think that if the SCA could do a slavishly good copy of Violet le Duc's middle ages, the place would look a whole lot better.

"pissen' n' moanin'",
Mac

Posted: Fri Mar 28, 2008 1:56 pm
by Andrew Young
Mac wrote:
Durasteel Corporation wrote:I know there some vicky stuff in there....but then again, vicky stuff is probably worlds better thant he average scadian gear too.

As an astute capt once said..its the lesser of two weevils :mrgreen:



I'm with ya for the most part...But armor still has to pass the "can this work on the human body" test.
Look again at that sabaton. In spite of all it's lames, it will not flex the 70 or 80 degrees required as a minimum for walking.
That said, I do see your point. Sometimes I think that if the SCA could do a slavishly good copy of Violet le Duc's middle ages, the place would look a whole lot better.

"pissen' n' moanin'",
Mac



I did my thesis on victorian medievalism and classicism....good old le Duc was so much fun to cite. ....along with Bessemer and a whole caudry of circus showmen of the 19th century. Gotta love 'em.